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smuguy97When I read your description, three words come to mind:

third year analyst

I agree. Although in my experience alot of the third years were really good and just couldn't decide if they wanted banking as a career or not (which people on this board may think is stupid because PE is "sooo awesome," but smart people do stay in banking sometimes). I've seen second years in groups like ECM transfer to better groups as 3rd years and do well and manage to land at some very respectable places, too.

But yes, the majority end at smaller mid-market buyout shops or HF (if buyside is even what they want).

 

I think typically, if you get the interview, it comes down more to the individual than their respective resumes.

People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for freedom of thought which they seldom use.
 

I would imagine most go back to business school, but I'm sure it depends on how the market is. If lots of places are hiring, I would imagine they just move on to another place.

"The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant, it's just that they know so much that isn't so." - Ronald Reagan
 

Same as the top bucket guys. All you need are good interview skills, including modeling, and three good references from your current job to land a PE gig. I'm sure a mid-bucket analyst can get three good references, or they would be bottom bucket. Plus recruiting for first years starts before any real ranking happens anyway, so it's not a big deal. If you're a second year, again not a big deal as long as you can drum up some references.

 

don't think there is a material difference between top, mid, or bottom-bucket exit ops because you get rankings after recruiting happens. even if you're the worst analyst in the group, if you can do well through the interview process and spin your experience well you can still end up at a megafund or top-tier hf

 

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